Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland July 2015

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/534597

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JULY 2015 • NEBRASKAland 47 themselves unpalatable to grazing animals, or produce thick fibrous tissues that are difficult to bite, chew and digest. A number of them also invest in rapidly-growing long taproots and other features that help them thrive in soil too dry for many of their competitors. As a result, in the aftermath of a season of drought, intensive grazing, summer wildfire or flooding, the landscape often erupts in a spectacular display of color. These kinds of flower shows have been happening for many thousands of years and provide evidence that natural communities are healthy and resilient. Flushes of colonizing plants provide vital short- term supplies of food and habitat for wildlife and pollinators. Dense patches of relatively fibrous or bad- tasting plants also provide weakened grasses a safe place to hide from large grazing animals during their vulnerable recovery period. Most importantly, despite being labeled as weeds and disparaged as unproductive and useless, colonizing plants fade away as the conditions that enabled them disappear. They are not competitive under good growing conditions; they are easily pushed aside by dominant grasses and other strong perennial plants. Trying to eliminate "weedy" plants during or after droughts, intensive grazing bouts, or other similar events doesn't bring back "desirable" plants any faster; it just favors more colonizers. Rather than fighting against floral explosions we should celebrate them the same way we would if they were people. Remember? Pioneers. Trailblazers. Colonizers. ■ Historically, there were four major forces that could stop those dominating occupiers: fire, grazing, drought and flooding. The big yellow four-point evening primrose (far left) is a biennial, and upright prairie coneflower (yellow/dark tops) and hoary vervain (purple) are perennials that respond very quickly from seed when grasses are weakened. This site had been grazed intensively during the previous year. It was not being grazed during the year of the photo but the tallgrasses were still short and weak – leaving abundant space for these showy colonizers. Chris Helzer is the Eastern Nebraska Program Director for the Nature Conservancy. He has been a contributor to NEBRASKAland since 1994. See his other story in this issue about milkweed plants on page 40.

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